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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 14
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- THEATER
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- JAKE'S WOMEN. Neil Simon's most nakedly autobiographical
- play, opening on Broadway this week, is also his most acidly
- self-critical. His enduring subject has been the emotional
- isolation of the artist, and he has never been more acute -- but
- there is nary a redemptive one-liner in earshot.
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- THE VIRGIN MOLLY. A soldier of dubious sexual orientation
- gives birth in this off-Broadway blend of bawdy barracks humor,
- blasphemy and brilliant surrealism.
-
- ON THE OPEN ROAD. Oscar-winning screenwriter Steve Tesich
- (Breaking Away) prefers the stage, where he can blend
- metaphysical ambition and gothic excess. In this tale of
- strugglers on the loose, there are echoes of Kerouac, Beckett
- and Reaganomics interwoven with Tesich's moral fervor. At
- Chicago's Goodman Theater.
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- TELEVISION
-
- ROOM FOR TWO (ABC, debuting March 24, 9:30 p.m. EST).
- Linda Lavin and Patricia Heaton spar with panache as a widowed
- mother and her TV-producer daughter. Nothing new, but sitcoms
- far worse than this have spent years in the Nielsen Top 10.
-
- A DOLL'S HOUSE (PBS, March 29, 9 p.m. on most stations).
- Ibsen's war-horse gets a powerful, unpatronizing new production
- in this Masterpiece Theater import. Juliet Stevenson (Truly,
- Madly, Deeply) perfectly calibrates Nora's prog ress from docile
- wife to proto-feminist, and Trevor Eve avoids easy caricature
- as her husband Torvald. Superb.
-
- THE ACADEMY AWARDS (ABC, March 30, 9 p.m. EST). In case
- you're looking for something to watch after the Barbara Walters
- Special.
-
- MUSIC
-
- STAN GETZ/KENNY BARRON: PEOPLE TIME (Verve). When the
- legendary tenor saxophonist Stan Getz died of cancer last June
- at age 64, the master of cool riffs and sultry melodic lines
- left an immense void in the jazz world. This two-volume set of
- duets with pianist Kenny Barron, recorded in Copenhagen only
- four months before Getz's death, combines passion, urgency and
- haunting beauty in a triumphant last testament.
-
- CHARLES IVES: PIANO SONATA NO. 2; AARON COPLAND: PIANO
- SONATA (Cedille Records). Ives' great "Concord" Sonata is a
- massive four-movement impressionistic piece marked by dense,
- polytonal chords, rhythmic daring and wit. Rarely performed
- because of its difficulty, it is brought to life here by pianist
- Easley Blackwood, whose secure technique and long involvement
- with the work are sure to win it a wider audience.
-
- MOVIES
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- HOWARDS END. E.M. Forster's novel of property and
- prejudice in Edwardian En gland is voluptuously rendered by
- director James Ivory and handsomely peopled by Emma Thompson,
- Helena Bonham Carter, Vanessa Redgrave and Anthony Hopkins. See
- it to savor the glory that England once was -- and that movies,
- all too rarely, can be.
-
- BASIC INSTINCT. This confused thriller, about a detective
- (Michael Douglas) and a bisexual novelist (Sharon Stone) who may
- do her sharpest work with an ice pick, has some steamy skin
- scenes; that's what all the ratings ruckus was about. (The film
- lost less than a minute and got an R.) But there's something
- wrong with a whodunit if, at the end, viewers are still asking,
- "O.K., who done it?" The answer is director Paul Verhoeven. And
- the next question is: Why?
-
- ARTICLE 99. Noble doctors have to break the rules at a
- veterans' hospital that is threatened by low funding and pompous
- bureaucracy. A vigorous cast, led by Ray Liotta and Kiefer
- Sutherland, pushes all the proper buttons for righteous
- melodrama. It's just that this old Hollywood machine doesn't
- work anymore.
-
- BOOKS
-
- THE NEW EMPERORS by Harrison E. Salisbury (Little, Brown;
- $24.95). Enlivened by dozens of interviews, this narrative
- history of China under communism by a seasoned journalist
- documents the chaos and corruption of Mao Zedong's reign and the
- inexorable trend toward glasnost that started under Deng
- Xiaoping.
-
- BARCELONA by Robert Hughes (Knopf; $27.50). The biography
- of a city of rebels and craftsmen, home of the first submarine
- and once the world capital of anarchism, as told in erudite
- prose and dazzling detail by TIME's veteran art critic.
-
- TO THE END OF TIME by Richard M. Clurman (Simon &
- Schuster; $23). The mother of all business deals -- the 1989
- betrothal of Time Inc. to Warner Communications -- is copiously
- documented by this former 20-year TIME staff member and
- editorial executive, who describes the intrigues, soul
- searching, chess moves and backstabbing in this sometimes
- startling, occasionally amusing chronicle of corporate courtship
- and union.
-
- ARE YOU BEING SERVED?
-
- The time is half-past the Apocalypse in the inventive
- French comedy DELICATESSEN, but the setting has the look of
- Gallic movies from the grungy-romantic '30s. Everything else is,
- well, different. Meat is scarce here, so the piggy butcher
- serves chopped humans to his customers -- who may soon be his
- victims. A housewife bent on suicide rigs up a dozen Rube
- Goldberg devices of destruction. Underground, an army of inept
- "Troglodists" (sort of Middle-Age Mutant Dingy Frogmen) plots
- revolution. And a nice guy in clown shoes hopes the butcher's
- myopic daughter will see the goodness in his heart. Part circus,
- part zoo, the film's milieu is a nice metaphor for the
- rudderless morals of post-Everything Europe. Writer-directors
- Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro go in your face with baroque
- camera angles a la Citizen Kane and zillions of rude sight gags;
- the movie could be called Welles-apoppin. When style runs riot,
- it can be lots of fun. But Delicatessen's style finally exhausts
- itself, and the viewer too.
-
-
- BY TIME'S REVIEWERS. Compiled by Georgia Harbison.
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